Backstop Purchaser

  

This is not a baseball team that signs up all the catchers they can find. Rather, a back-stop purchaser buys the leftover shares from the underwriter of an equity or rights offering. In that way, a back-stop purchaser is like an insurance policy. The purchaser guarantees that a company (and/or its investment bank) will raise the cash it needs to raise.

Example: Company A is going public. It plans to issue 10 million shares in an initial public offering (IPO). Bank B agrees to underwrite the IPO. Bank B does its research, or due diligence. Feeling good about the deal, Bank B agrees to sell the 10 million shares for $25 per share.

Bank B also comes to a special agreement with a wealthy hedge fund guy, Mr Hedge. Mr Hedge agrees to be Bank B's back-stop purchaser. If Bank ABC can't sell all the shares in the IPO, Mr. Hedge agrees to buy those leftovers. Being no dummy, Mr. Hedge obtains a fee for agreeing to be the back stop. He is taking on the risk of having to purchase and then trying to reissue Company A's securities.

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Finance: What is an IPO?25 Views

00:00

And finance allah shmoop What is an i p o

00:07

Well this is a hippo and it has nothing to

00:09

do with an ipo Auras Normal humans pronounce it if

00:12

both well actually most people just spell it out I

00:15

po It stands for initial public offering In the three

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words tell the story and i pl refers to a

00:21

company who's raising money by selling shares of itself to

00:25

the public for the first time a maiden voyage in

00:28

public funding if you will Whatever dot com has forty

00:35

million shares outstanding after three private rounds with venture capitalists

00:38

and private investors it wants to raise money to go

00:41

big internationally And for the first time it will offer

00:44

shares to joe and jill public And that means that

00:48

all of it shares will be tradable publicly on the

00:51

open market like on nasdaq or the new york stock

00:54

exchange That is the insiders early investors founders et cetera

00:58

will be able to just call their broker at schwab

01:01

or fidelity or wherever and sell their shares get liquid

01:05

and buy themselves a maserati because it's not what everyone

01:08

does after a nice meal So whatever dot com sells

01:11

ten million shares a twelve bucks each to raise one

01:13

hundred twenty million dollars which they can spend to build

01:16

out offices all over the world So yeah that's an

01:18

ai po and that's Why a company generally wants to

01:21

make shares available to the public because once you've made

01:24

an initial public offering and you make money off the

01:27

sales of your stock you khun by as many hippos

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as you like and just remember to feed them three

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times a day they get Cranky if they go too 00:01:35.158 --> [endTime] long in between No

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